posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byKristin Stook, Thabet Tolaymat, Marnie Ward, Brajesh Dubey, Timothy Townsend, Helena Solo-Gabriele, Gabriel Bitton
Size-reduced samples of southern yellow pine dimensional
lumber, each treated with one of five different waterborne
chemical preservatives, were leached using 18-h batch
leaching tests. The wood preservatives included chromated
copper arsenate (CCA), alkaline copper quaternary,
copper boron azole, copper citrate, and copper dimethyldithiocarbamate. An unpreserved wood sample was tested
as well. The batch leaching tests followed methodology
prescribed in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
toxicity characteristic leaching procedure (TCLP). The wood
samples were first size-reduced and then leached using
four different leaching solutions (synthetic landfill leachate,
synthetic rainwater, deionized water, and synthetic
seawater). CCA-treated wood leached greater concentrations
of arsenic and copper relative to chromium, with copper
leaching more with the TCLP and synthetic seawater. Copper
leached at greater concentrations from the arsenic-free
preservatives relative to CCA. Arsenic leached from CCA-treated wood at concentrations above the U.S. federal
toxicity characteristic limit (5 mg/L). All of the arsenic-free alternatives displayed a greater degree of aquatic toxicity
compared to CCA. Invertebrate and algal assays were
more sensitive than Microtox. Examination of the relative
leaching of the preservative compounds indicated that the
arsenic-free preservatives were advantageous over CCA
with respect to waste disposal and soil contamination issues
but potentially posed a greater risk to aquatic ecosystems.